Microsoft Azure News: 2020 Year in Review
Hindsight is 2020, or so the old saying goes. With the year now almost wrapped up, it is time to take a look back at a wild start to the new decade. In a year defined by remote work, lockdowns, and high-tech, Azure experienced continued uptake, added new services, modified existing offerings, and continued to be a focus of financial performance.
The articles presented below represent Azure-focused news and articles that covered 2020's most notable product changes and the topics that our audience was most interested to read about.
Where hybrid cloud is headed next, and the role of Microsoft Azure (Feb. 27)
For many organizations, the number of hybrid infrastructure components continues to grow relative to on-prem. Hybrid promises to boost agility, while allowing on-prem systems to keep running, although costs around MPLS-connectivity are spurring faster shifts.
Putting Azure to work to reduce cyber risks: From panic buttons to predictive services (Sept. 2)
PwC partner, Paul Gaynor, explained how the major audit and consulting firm is using Azure for cybersecurity needs, including its use of Sentinel.
Containing costs in the cloud: Azure deployments that manage spending (Jul. 13)
Cloud experts weighed in on the question of how to contain costs in the cloud. Potential mistakes abound: failing to turn off VMs, purchasing for peak capacity and not making future commitments to name a few. Too many companies remain entrenched in budgeting patterns from the pre-cloud era, but internal tooling and new strategies can help.
Microsoft Cloud for Healthcare, a new industry-focused solution, launches (Oct. 28)
After entering public preview in May, Cloud for Healthcare became generally available across products such as Dynamics 365 Marketing, Customer Voice, Customer Insights, Azure FHIR and others at the end of October. The offering is aimed to provide tools for patients and care teams to share data, including integrations with third-party electronic health record systems.
What will a Biden administration mean for cloud and data regulations? (Nov. 11)
With the election of Joe Biden as incoming US president in November, 2020, tech watchers assessed what a new administration will mean for cloud and data regulations. By some accounts, President Biden may favor expanded data privacy protections, more in-line with those already in-place in Europe, although there is likely to be bipartisan support for exceptions favoring law enforcement. In the meantime, US states continue to move ahead with their own data regulations.
Beyond JEDI, government cloud opportunities globally will abound for Microsoft, competitors (Sept. 25)
Microsoft stunned many analysts when it secured the highly-competitive JEDI contract with the US Department of Defense in late 2019. Going forward, Microsoft's wide-ranging technologies mean it may be well positioned to win new opportunities with other agencies and governments in need of cloud services. On the horizon: cloud projects with intelligence agencies, finance and health and human services agencies.
Ignite 2020: Microsoft stresses AI, edge, IoT and business resilience for cloud roadmap (Sept. 22)
At its virtual, 2020 Ignite event, Microsoft leaders put the focus on business adaptation to Covid-19, AI, edge, IoT and hybrid cloud capabilities. Highly engaged preview customers are taking part in testing of Azure Communication Services, introduced in October.
See also:
- Azure Hybrid at Ignite: Microsoft signals multi-cloud, multi-edge capabilities
- Ignite 2020: Key takeaways for the Azure community
- Microsoft Azure and Power BI: As footprint grows, interoperable systems will boost performance
Azure Purview, Synapse Analytics, Power BI and the "paradox of analytics" (Dec. 4)
Microsoft announced the launch of Azure Purview as the year came to a close. The new offering tracks data lineage, conducts data discovery, and looks across Power BI, SaaS apps and cloud locations. Additionally, it adds sensitivity labels in Microsoft 365 Compliance Center.
Containing costs with Azure during the coronavirus crisis (Apr. 23)
How do cloud administrators curb costs in a crisis? When the global pandemic began nearly three-quarters of a year ago, experts advised customers to shift from IaaS to PaaS, swap out database servers and remove idle instances.
Microsoft launches Azure Space to pursue new connectivity, compute opportunities (Oct. 20)
Microsoft CVP Tom Keane detailed the launch of Azure Space. The nascent effort will leverage its Modular Datacenter along with SpaceX Starlink technology to provide high-speed, low-latency satellite broadband.
Azure IoT Digital Twins enters general availability (Dec. 8)
IoT Digital Twins may have been one of the most discussed Azure offerings of the year, allowing modeling of real-world technology in digital space such as factories or even entire cities. The offering supports multi-dimensional modeling, physics-based simulations and AI. Developers can leverage SDKs, explorer samples and Digital Twins Definition Language, which provide modeling and validation tools. Digital Twins interoperates with IoT Hub, Data Lake, Synapse Analytics and Time Series Insights.
See also:
- Bentley Systems expands its Microsoft partnership with a focus on digital twins
- Samsung and Microsoft announce a smart property management partnership
- Mining giant BHP works around a mine site lockdown with Azure IoT and Dynamics 365 mixed reality
- Microsoft to strengthen and accelerate Azure IoT security with CyberX acquisition (Jun. 22)
Microsoft closed out July by announcing its annual Partner of the Year award winners. On the list was Informatica, providing big data, AI and data processing with Azure Synapse Analytics. A company VP shared Informatica's journey with Microsoft and experiences using Azure services.
New and improved partnerships
Microsoft's partnerships can serve to provide the most specific signals of where cloud services are gaining trust and traction in the market. While these agreements can often take years to reveal their true value,
- Microsoft and Accenture team up with CNH Industrial around connected vehicles (Dec. 1)
- Tech Mahindra Launches Dedicated Microsoft Business Unit (Sept. 3)
- Rockwell Automation and Microsoft join forces for new edge-to-cloud offering (Oct. 6)
- Microsoft and Workday launch a strategic partnership (May 29)
- Microsoft partner award winner Informatica on next opportunities for data management in Azure (Jul. 30)
- Halliburton partners with Microsoft and Accenture, migrating data centers to Azure (July 17)
- Universal partners with Microsoft to leverage Azure (Aug 21)
- Coca-Cola launches a strategic partnership with Microsoft (Apr 27)
- Microsoft and Honeywell to integrate connected enterprise, field service solutions (Oct 22)
- PepsiCo and Microsoft broker a new Azure partnership (July 27)
- Call Journey partners with Microsoft on voice data analytics (Sept 1)
- Commvault, Microsoft ink new SaaS data protection partnership (July 2)
- NetApp makes Azure NetApp Files available (Aug 6)
Azure growth under a stock market microscope
Microsoft continued to impress Wall Street with revenue and earnings numbers that exceeded expectations and a resilient product lineup seemingly built to withstand the crises of 2020. Azure revenue growth was always an earnings headline, and while it descended from 2019's even higher rates, it held steady over the final two quarters reported this year.
- Q2 2020: Azure revenue grew 62%
- Q3 2020: Azure revenue grew 59%
- Q4 2020: Azure revenue grew 47%
- Q1 2021: Azure revenue grew 48%
...
Photo by Henry Dick on Unsplash
FREE Membership Required to View Full Content:
Joining MSDynamicsWorld.com gives you free, unlimited access to news, analysis, white papers, case studies, product brochures, and more. You can also receive periodic email newsletters with the latest relevant articles and content updates.
Learn more about us here